Princess Victoire of Norandivium

Princess Victoire of Norandivium, Princess Aragon (Victoire Helena Aragon; 14 April 1882 – 30 April 1975) was Princess Aragon of Norandivium from 10 January 1898 until 2 September 1959, and was coronated as the new Queen on 2 September 1960; one whole year after the death of her mother. Until 1960 to 1975, she reigned as the Queen of Norandivium.

Known as "Vic" among her family and close friends, Victoire was born in the reign of her grandmother Queen Alice and was named after her own mother Princess Victoire, Duchess of Snowdrift. As the first daughter of Princess Margaret, she was expected to inherit the throne and spent her early years in the shadow of her parents, Margaret and Victoire. She attended naval college as a teenager and served in the British Royal Navy during the First World War and Second World War. In 1920, she was made Admiral of Hastings County in Oneidas, Belladonna, on the northern coast of the Kingdom. As the heir apparent and eldest unmarried child of her parents, she also received the title of Princess Aragon; which raised a lot of concerns with plans being drawn up as to the succession of the crown. In the mid 1920`s, her younger brother (Prince Harrison) experienced lapses of unconsciousness and eventually died from a severe brain tumor planted firmerly in his brain; this caused the young Princess much distress. Her mother, Alice Conroy, was often busy with her own duties and rarely-if-ever visited her children; in fact there were reports that the young Princess Aragon was being abused by her own mother when factually she had simply fallen down the stairs.

In 1 September 1918, Norandivium declared absolute neutrality—this frustrated their allies—eventually after a series of serious attacks against merchant ships who had been blown up by their allies, this policy was rescinded. Though they were none-the-happy, they reluctantly agreed to fight in the up-coming Second World War. Princess Victoire went personally to deliver a statement from the Government but her courtier ship was attacked by a torpedo from a German U-Boat; the enraged public demanded justice for the almost-drowning of their heir apparent (not that Germany was aware of it at the time) and demanded that Germany pay reoperations, as well as a formal apology to their heir apparent.